the cost of desire
by Douglas Messerli
Alain
Guiraudie (writer and director) L'Inconnu du lac (The Stranger by the
Lake) / 2013
What is the cost of sexual desire? I once went
home with a beautiful boy from a Greenwich Village bar, who asked if he might
he piss all over me. I insisted that I was not interested. But he still managed
to infect me with Gonorrhea (not my first time, sad to say).
French director Alain Guiraudie explores far deeper issues in his 2013
film L'Inconnu du lac (The Stranger by the
Lake) where a desiring young man, attending a gay nude beach whose
nearby woods lures both old and young, to have sex, consensual and voyeuristic.
Basically an innocent, Franck (Pierre Deladonchamps) attends these beach
outings, calmly sitting next to the mostly passive rotund and unattractive
Henri (Patrick d'Assumçao), who seemingly has no interest in the cruising
activities of the younger people around him, yet is gently attentive to his
conversations with the handsome young Franck. Occasionally, they even take a
quiet dinner together.
Henri, evidently suffering the pains of a long-ago death of his wife,
seeks out the lakeside gay retreat as a simply place of last resort, or, one
might describe it as search for a world far away “from the other side,” a part
of the beach sought out by heterosexual nudists who want nothing to do with the
gay boys and older men on the other side.
Into this world the innocent Franck enters, not a regular in this
seemingly perverse world, but almost falling in love at first sight with a
mustachioed young man—which some critics have pointed out is almost the model
of 1970s porno films—whom he observes drowning his sexual companion in the
lake.
The saddest thing about this rather complex film is that Franck does not
report the act, and, in fact himself falls in love with the murderer. Yes, this
is a story about AIDS, in which the most knowing of gays often could not resist
their own infatuations with those who they surely knew might have been causing
their deaths; but the film is also Eros and Thanatos, the gentle, sometimes even desired,
movement of love into death.
The
fact that he will not invite Franck home and even provide him with a
description of how he is employed hints, however, that there is something
darker than even jealousy about his actions. Is he married to a woman with a
family, hating himself for his sexual “indiscretions?” Does he perhaps live
with a mother or father to whom it is impossible to reveal his activities?
I’d argue that one of the major failures of Guiraudie’s film is that, in
fact, we know virtually nothing about the daily inhabitants of this lakeside
beach. How do they all financially support their daily treks to the lake and
woods surrounding? Indeed, the director presents them only as mostly sexual predators.
Only the quiet Henri and the kind Franck seem to have depth of personality.
Yet
Franck, knowing the truth, refuses to reveal it, living a lie that is as deep
as the murderous intentions of his temporary lover; and Henri, suspecting the
truth is murdered, presumably by Michel, for his knowledge. Michel cannot but
perceive that Henri’s friend must also know what has happened.
Yet once Michel seems to have left and darkness has descended upon this
false paradise, Franck exits his hideaway in the reeds to call out Michel’s
name, at first quietly, then louder, and finally in a kind desperate shout, as
if he has not only lost his love, but is totally prepared to face the
consequences of being reunited.
The film ends in near total darkness draping over the vaguely perceived
shoulders of Franck. We know the ending without Guiraudie having even to tell
us. The danger of darkness is what that woods is all about.
Los Angeles, December 17, 2019
Reprinted from My Queer Cinema blog
(December 2019).




No comments:
Post a Comment